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Yau Yu Chan; Hei-hang Hayes Tang – Education and Urban Society, 2025
Rising educational inequality is considered as one pressing social problem in many national education systems. There is limited existing literature that examines how youth from different social backgrounds perceive and consider social inequalities and "justice." This study addresses this research gap by probing the perspectives of…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Student Empowerment, Neoliberalism, Educational Practices
Mary Campbell-Day – History of Education, 2024
This article presents an understanding of the context, nature and significance of Mary Gurney's educational career during the years 1863 to 1917. It is assisted in part by the conceptual lenses of feminist thinking and network theory. Despite neglect by past historians, Gurney's work was seen by contemporaries as equal in significance to that of…
Descriptors: Educational History, Females, Secondary Education, Higher Education
Qianyun Yu; Yang Song – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2024
Despite an extensive body of literature that has examined the role of museums in cultural reproduction and public education, most of the current discussion is western-centred. Whilst explorations of museum education in developing countries often focus on the institution, the agency perspective regarding how different social groups negotiate access…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Museums, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Differences
Tombak-Ilhan, Büsra; Gündüz, Mustafa – Power and Education, 2023
This paper aims to understand the nature of classrooms, "power containers" in Gidden's words (Giddens, 1986, p.136), in terms of inequality and power share. Inequalities in education have been a by-passed subject in Turkey for a long time, and classroom practices remained "black boxes" (Mehan, 1979, p.4). Thus, after a brief…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Power Structure, Equal Education, Teacher Student Relationship
Mordechay, Kfir – Leadership and Policy in Schools, 2022
Municipal governments have long looked to gentrification in hopes of addressing social problems, including poverty concentration, crime, and more recently, school segregation. Yet, little is known about the educational implications of neighborhood gentrification. This article examines the process of "school gentrification" exploring…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Charter Schools, Elementary Schools, School Desegregation
Nguyen, Chinh Duc; Ha, Xuan – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2023
One of the challenges to Vietnamese education has been the schooling inequality between students of the ethnic majority and those of ethnic minorities. This paper, therefore, reports on research that explored the challenges to educational equity for ethnic minority students in Vietnam from stakeholders at the lowest levels. Data were collected…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Minority Group Students, Ethnicity, Equal Education
Cheng Zhong – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2024
School choice policy in China aims to achieve educational equity by limiting school choice. Synchronous Admission Reform (SAR hereafter) is a recent school choice reform in China, which continues to limit parents' autonomy and strengthen the equal distribution of school resources. This study explores Chinese middle-class parents' (n = 21) justice…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Choice, Equal Education, Parent Grievances
Abigail Parrish – Journal of Education Policy, 2024
Modern Foreign Languages (MFL) as a secondary school subject is affected by two policies, namely the English Baccalaureate (EBacc) and Progress 8, which contribute to the measurement of performance in exams at age 16 (GCSEs). In this paper, I discuss the concept of performance measurement in schools and the purpose it purportedly serves, before…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Schools, Second Language Learning, Language Tests
Ebru Eren – Online Submission, 2023
Privatization of education has expanded dramatically worldwide in the last two decades, and Turkey is no exception. It is seen that the developments affecting the transformation of public services began with the implementation of neoliberal education policies, especially after the 1980s. These policies have led to a significant transformation in…
Descriptors: Privatization, School Choice, Public Education, Foreign Countries
Gast, Melanie Jones – Sociology of Education, 2022
Past work and college-access programs often treat college knowledge as discrete pieces of information and focus on the amount of available college information. I use ethnographic and multiwave interview data to compare college-aspiring working- and middle-class black 9th and 11th graders across almost two years in high school along with their…
Descriptors: College Bound Students, Academic Aspiration, Middle Class, African Americans
Rachel Louise Stenhouse; Nicola Ingram – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2024
In this article we make an argument for the importance of embodied cultural capital in the generation of class advantage through private school students' access to Oxbridge. Private schools in England continue to reproduce advantage (Variyan 2019), however, establishing exactly how students are advantaged through private schooling is not…
Descriptors: Cultural Capital, Advantaged, Social Class, Private Schools
Atul Kumar; Vinaydeep Brar; Chetan Chaudhari; Shirish S. Raibagkar – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2025
The Indian government enacted the Right to Education Act (RTE) to provide free and compulsory elementary education to all economically underprivileged children between ages 6 and 14. All schools, including private schools, are required to reserve 25% of their enrollment slots for such students, with the government shouldering their fees. While…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Selective Admission, Access to Education, Educational Legislation
M. Antony-Newman; S. Niyozov; K. Pashchenko – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2024
Despite the rhetoric of 'we are all in this together' during the COVID-19 pandemic, not all families experienced schooling disruption in 2020-2022 equally. Middle-class parents typically enjoy significant advantage over parents in working-class occupations. To illuminate class-based differences in parental engagement during the COVID-19 pandemic,…
Descriptors: Middle Class, Parent Participation, COVID-19, Pandemics
Willow Lung-Amam – RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2023
This article explores how middle-class Asian immigrants disrupted settled geographies and social relations in a high-tech Southern suburb. In a case study of controversies over the redrawing of the Chapel Hill school district attendance boundaries, it asks what middle-class Asian immigrants attempts to navigate the space "between Black and…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Asians, Politics of Education, Social Integration
Kaitlin Jackson – Taboo: The Journal of Culture and Education, 2023
This opinion piece explores the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on exposing educational inequity. The historically racist and discriminatory practices related to both academic instruction and discipline are long-standing in the history of American education, but have been brought to the attention of White, middle-class America as a result of the…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Equal Education, United States History